Abstract

SummaryThe historical and geographical spread from older to more modern languages has long been studied by examining textual changes and in terms of changes in phonetic transcriptions. However, it is more difficult to analyse language change from an acoustic point of view, although this is usually the dominant mode of transmission. We propose a novel analysis approach for acoustic phonetic data, where the aim will be to model the acoustic properties of spoken words statistically. We explore phonetic variation and change by using a time–frequency representation, namely the log-spectrograms of speech recordings. We identify time and frequency covariance functions as a feature of the language; in contrast, mean spectrograms depend mostly on the particular word that has been uttered. We build models for the mean and covariances (taking into account the restrictions placed on the statistical analysis of such objects) and use these to define a phonetic transformation that models how an individual speaker would sound in a different language, allowing the exploration of phonetic differences between languages. Finally, we map back these transformations to the domain of sound recordings, enabling us to listen to the output of the statistical analysis. The approach proposed is demonstrated by using recordings of the words corresponding to the numbers from 1 to 10 as pronounced by speakers from five different Romance languages.

Highlights

  • Historical and comparative linguistics is the branch of linguistics which studies languages’ evolution and relationships

  • Some of the techniques that we describe here might be useful tools to address these kinds of sociolinguistics questions

  • The aim of our work is to provide a framework where (a) speech recordings can be analysed to identify features of a language, (b) the variability of speech within the language can be considered and (c) the acoustic differences between languages can be explored on the basis of speech recordings, taking into account intralanguage variability

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Summary

Introduction

Historical and comparative linguistics is the branch of linguistics which studies languages’ evolution and relationships. The idea that languages develop historically by a process that is roughly similar to biological evolution is generally accepted; see, for example, Cavalli-Sforza (1997) and Nakhleh et al (2005). Pagel (2009) claimed that genes and languages have similar. Aston evolutionary behaviour and offered an extensive catalogue of analogies between biological and linguistic evolution. This immediately gives rise to the notion of familial relationships between languages

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